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Discover... London

The reason central London is so very exciting for historians is that so much has happened here over such a long period of time.

London was founded in what is now the financial district, the Square Mile, after the Roman invasion of 43 AD. It was abandoned during part of the Dark Ages, when there was a Saxon port further along the river near where the West End is today, then reoccupied during the reign of Alfred the Great in the 9th century.

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Discover... The East of England

East Anglia is a beautiful land of ghosts. In the 13th century this was the most densely populated part of Britain, but the last 700 years have seen a slow decline.

As England’s primary economic focus shifted from trade with the Low Countries to its Empire and the great Atlantic ports in the west, large-scale depopulation occured in the east. A common sight in this region today is an incongruously huge medieval church towering over a tiny, shrunken village.

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Discover... The Midlands

The English counties that run along the Welsh border south of Cheshire shelter some of the most idyllic countryside in Britain, undiscovered jewels that do not catch the eyes of those who live elsewhere because they think there is nothing more to this region than the conurbations around Birmingham. They could not be more wrong.

It was on the fertile agricultural lands of the Midlands that some of the greatest fortunes of medieval England were made, and this is still an excellent place to find unspoilt villages and towns that have changed little in centuries.

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Love Wimbledon All Year Round

Discover Britain

Find the best features and places to go and stay with our interactive map of Great Britain

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A hoard to change history

A remarkable hoard of Anglo-Saxon treasure has been discovered in Staffordshire. The collection of over 1,500 items is set to transform our understanding of the Dark Ages and spark decades of debate between archaeologists, historians and enthusiasts.
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